Academic literature on the topic 'Textile fibers Prices United States'

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Journal articles on the topic "Textile fibers Prices United States"

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Yeniwati, Yeniwati. "FAKTOR PENDORONG EKSPOR PRODUK TEKSTIL INDONESIA KE AMERIKA." Ecosains: Jurnal Ilmiah Ekonomi dan Pembangunan 2, no. 1 (May 1, 2013): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.24036/ecosains.347157.00.

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This study aims to analyze effect of export prices and United States income on export textile Indonesia to The United State. Types of data used are secondary data from 1982 until 2011. Analysis of the data used the OLS Method. The results are export prices and United States income significant effect on exports of textiles Indonesia to the United States. It can be seen from positive coefficient value and significant.
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Abdelkader, Mohamed. "MATLAB Algorithms for Diameter Measurements of Textile Yarns and Fibers through Image Processing Techniques." Materials 15, no. 4 (February 10, 2022): 1299. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15041299.

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Textile yarns are the fundamental building blocks in the fabric industry. The measurement of the diameter of the yarn textile and fibers is crucial in textile engineering as the diameter size and distribution can affect the yarn’s properties, and image processing can provide automatic techniques for faster and more accurate determination of the diameters. In this paper, facile and new methods to measure the yarn’s diameter and its individual fibers diameter based on image processing algorithms that can be applied to microscopic digital images. Image preprocessing such as binarization and morphological operations on the yarn image were used to measure the diameter automatically and accurately compared to the manual measuring using ImageJ software. In addition to the image preprocessing, the circular Hough transform was used to measure the diameter of the individual fibers in a yarn’s cross-section and count the number of fibers. The algorithms were built and deployed in a MATLAB (R2020b, The MathWorks, Inc., Natick, Massachusetts, United States) environment. The proposed methods showed a reliable, fast, and accurate measurement compared to other different image measuring softwares, such as ImageJ.
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Irvansyah, Faizal, Hermanto Siregar, and Tanti Novianti. "The Determinants of Indonesian Textile’s and Clothing Export to the Five Countries of Export Destination." ETIKONOMI 19, no. 1 (March 22, 2020): 19–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.15408/etk.v19i1.14845.

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Indonesian textile and clothing products (TPT) is the second-largest export product after oil palm product. There are five biggest export destination countries, that is the United States, Japan, South Korea, and Turkey. This study aims to analyze the factors that affect TPT exports to the five biggest export destination countries. The factors that affect TPT exports examined by using time series and panel data analysis. Using panel data analysis finds that GDP per capita of the destination country, the exchange rate of the Rupiah, the price of textiles in the destination country, and import tariffs stipulate in the destination country affect TPT exports. Then, using time series analysis finds that GDP per capita and import tariffs affected TPT export to the United States, China, and Turkey. Meanwhile, the factors influencing Indonesian textile exports to Japan and South Korea are textile prices, rupiah exchange rates, and import tariffs.JEL Classification: F14, F43How to Cite:Irvansyah, F., Siregar, H., & Novianti, T. (2020). The Determinants of Indonesian Textile’s and Clothing Export to the Five Countries of Export Destination. Etikonomi: Jurnal Ekonomi, 19(1), 19 – 30. https://doi.org/10.15408/etk.v19i1.14845.
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Seock, Yoo-Kyoung, Andrea Giraudo, and Leah Gautreaux. "Case Study Of U.S. Cotton Textile Industry." Journal of Business Case Studies (JBCS) 9, no. 3 (April 26, 2013): 243–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/jbcs.v9i3.7802.

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Ever since its introduction to the United States, cotton has played an important role in the U.S. economy and its position in the international market. The success of cotton production in the U.S. has, in the past, served as a major boost for the American economy and a catalyst for industrial improvements and inventions. However, the global market for cotton fibers and cotton-based textile products has undergone a few changes over the past decades. Competition surrounding cotton has placed the industry under pressure and intense competition among the largest producers such as China, India, and Pakistan. Due to the increased competition of the cotton production and international trade of cotton in the global market alongside the decreased production of textile products, the U.S. cotton industry had to look beyond its own borders to meet the demands of the global textile market. The purpose of this paper is to examine and discuss the important issues raised in the U.S. cotton textile industry and to look for the future of this industry. The case can be used as a tool to stimulate a critical evaluation of the industry and to facilitate discussion about the potential strategies to make the industry viable.
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Edwards, J. Vincent, Elena Graves, Nicolette Prevost, Brian Condon, Dorne Yager, Joseph Dacorta, and Alvin Bopp. "Development of a Nonwoven Hemostatic Dressing Based on Unbleached Cotton: A De Novo Design Approach." Pharmaceutics 12, no. 7 (June 30, 2020): 609. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12070609.

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Minimally processed greige (unbleached) cotton fibers demonstrate enhanced clotting relative to highly processed United States Pharmacopeia (USP) type 7 bleached cotton gauze. This effect is thought to be due to the material surface polarity. We hypothesized that a textile could be constructed, conserving the hemostasis-accelerating properties of greige cotton, while maintaining structural integrity and improving absorbance. Spun bond nonwovens of varying surface polarity were designed and prepared based on ratios of greige cotton/bleached cotton/polypropylene fibers. A thromboelastographic analysis was performed on fibrous samples in citrated blood to evaluate the rate of fibrin and clot formation. Lee White clotting times were obtained to assess the material’s clotting activity in platelet fresh blood. An electrokinetic analysis of samples was performed to analyze for material surface polarity. Hemostatic properties varied with composition ratios, fiber density, and fabric fenestration. The determinations of the surface polarity of cotton fabrics with electrokinetic analysis uncovered a range of surface polarities implicated in fabric-initiated clotting; a three-point design approach was employed with the combined use of thromboelastography, thrombin velocity index, Lee White clotting, and absorption capacity determinations applied to fabric structure versus function analysis. The resulting analysis demonstrates that greige cotton may be utilized, along with hydrophilic and hydrophobic fibers, to improve the initiation of fibrin formation and a decrease in clotting time in hemostatic dressings suitable to be commercially developed. Hydroentanglement is an efficient and effective process for imparting structural integrity to cotton-based textiles, while conserving hemostatic function.
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Kuttruff, Jenna Tedrick. "The Interpretation of Textile Production and Use by High and Low Status Caddoan Groups." MRS Proceedings 185 (1990). http://dx.doi.org/10.1557/proc-185-777.

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AbstractThis paper demonstrates the application of technical studies of the fragmented remains of archaeological textiles to the reconstruction of past textile technologies and to the interpretation of the cultural phenomenon of status differentiation. The analyses of archaeological textile remains recovered from Caddoan burial contexts (Mississippian period) in Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Missouri provided information for the interpretation of differential production and use of textiles by high and low status groups within that prehistoric society of the southeastern United States. The research is based upon the characterization of specific textile attributes and burial context. The data sets utilized in the textile analyses include fabric structure, fabric scale, edge treatment, patterning, design, coloration, yarn structure, and fibers. Production complexity for each textile is assessed and then ranked using a recently developed textile production complexity index. Those specific textile attributes that appear to be most highly associated with status differences are identified using two different statistical procedures. Technological differences as well as textile utilization patterns between high and low groups are explored.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Textile fibers Prices United States"

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Meyer, Seth Dominic. "A model of textile fiber supply and inter-fiber competition with emphasis on the United States of America /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 2002. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p3060124.

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Books on the topic "Textile fibers Prices United States"

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United States. Federal Trade Commission. Rules and regulations under the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act: Effective March 3, 1960, as amended July 9, 1986. [Washington, DC?]: Federal Trade Commission, 1996.

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Commission, United States Federal Trade. Rules and regulations under the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act: Effective March 3, 1960, as amended July 9, 1986. [Washington, D.C.?]: Federal Trade Commission, 1996.

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Commission, United States International Trade. Flat goods of manmade fibers, luggage of manmade fibers, and handbags of manmade fibers: Report to the United States Trade Representative on investigation no. 332-208, under section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930. Washington, DC: U.S. International Trade Commission, 1985.

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Edible and useful plants of Texas and the southwest: Including recipes, harmful plants, natural dyes, and textile fibers : a practical guide. Austin, Tex: University of Texas Press, 1999.

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Office, General Accounting. International trade: U.S. Customs and Border Protection faces challenges in addressing illegal textile transshipment : report to congressional committees. Washington, D.C: GAO, 2004.

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Office, General Accounting. International trade: Concerns over biotechnology challenge U.S. agricultural exports : report to the Ranking Minority Member, Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate. Washington, D.C. (P.0. Box 37050 Washington 20013): The Office, 2001.

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Office, General Accounting. International trade: Improvements needed to track and archive trade agreements : report to the chairman, Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1999.

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Office, General Accounting. International trade: Romanian trade data : report to the chairman, Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1992.

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Office, General Accounting. International trade: Mexico's maquiladora decline affects U.S.-Mexico border communities and trade : recovery depends in part on Mexico's actions. Washington, D.C: GAO, 2003.

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Office, General Accounting. International trade: Strategy needed to better monitor and enforce trade agreements : report to the Chairman, Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington, D.C. 20013): The Office, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Textile fibers Prices United States"

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Schelhorn, Jean E., and Joan M. Herbers. "Profile: Peter Tsai." In Beyond Discovery, 24–25. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197512715.003.0004.

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Peter Tsai is a materials scientist who has conducted extensive research on nonwoven materials, especially melt-blown fibers and webs. He helped solve many important unmet needs, especially for filtration improvement, and his inventions/patents have been commercially significant for many industrial and medical applications. Taiwanese-born Tsai came to the United States after graduating college and working at the Taiwan Textile Research Institute. He received his PhD in materials science from Kansas State University in 1984, and then he accepted a position at the University of Tennessee, where he remained until his retirement in 2019 and is now an Emeritus Professor....
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Skinner, H. Catherine W., Malcolm Ross, and Clifford Frondel. "What Is an Inorganic Fiber?" In Asbestos and Other Fibrous Materials. Oxford University Press, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195039672.003.0004.

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Fibers are everywhere around us. They are essential parts of the human body, our hair, for example; the threads in our clothing, natural or synthetic; the insulation in our houses. Natural fibers have been useful to humans for more than ten thousand years. They were mixed with clay before firing to strengthen and reinforce pottery vessels, making them more durable. Textiles that combined the fibers of flax and asbestos were known in ancient times for their seemingly magical resistance to fire and decay. It was industrialization, however, that caused a dramatic increase in the use of natural inorganic or mineral fibers. By the late nineteenth century asbestos had become an important commodity with a variety of commercial applications. It served as insulation to control heat generated by engines and, because of its incombustibility, as a fire retardant in its more recent general use as building insulation. Asbestos fibers are found worldwide in many products: as reinforcement in cement water pipes and the inert and durable mesh material used in filtration processes of chemicals and petroleum, for example. However, asbestos is not the only inorganic fiber in use today. Synthetic inorganic fibers abound. Glass fibers have replaced copper wire in some intercontinental telephone cables. Fiberglas (a trade name) has become the insulation material of choice in construction. Carbon and graphite fiber composites are favored materials for tennis racket frames and golf clubs. Fibrous inorganic materials have become commonplace in our everyday lives. As the use of inorganic fibers increased, there were some indications that fibers might be hazardous to our health. Since the first century A.D. it was suspected that asbestos might be the cause of illness among those who mined and processed the material. Asbestosis, a debilitating and sometimes fatal lung disorder, was documented and described in the nineteenth century. Within the last 25 years, lung cancer and mesothelioma have also been linked to asbestos exposure among construction and textile workers, as well as others exposed to dusts containing asbestos fibers. Although the etiology and specific mechanisms that give rise to these two cancers are not yet understood, concern for the health of exposed workers led the governments of the United States and other countries to specify the maximum allowable concentrations of asbestos in the ambient air of the workplace.
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Gordon, Robert B., and Patrick M. Malone. "The Factory." In The Texture of Industry. Oxford University Press, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195058857.003.0015.

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With Samuel Slater’s textile mill (1793, in Pawtucket, Rhode Island) and Eli Whitney’s armory (1798, in Whitneyville, Connecticut), American entrepreneurs began to make in factories products that had formerly been made in homes or craft shops. Another new concept in manufacturing, the principle of uniformity (sometimes described as “interchangeability”), was also winning converts in America. Factories making uniform products increasingly used power-driven machinery in the production process. However, it is a mistake to conflate mechanization, factories, and uniformity. Mechanization was used in colonial craft shops as well as in nineteenth-century factories. Until the late nineteenth century, factory managers achieved uniformity primarily through improved handwork skills and gauging rather than with machinery. Chapter 9 will cover the mechanization of work in factories as well as efforts to achieve uniformity in machine parts. Many of the best examples of early American factories are in New England, where there was a serendipitous combination of water power, entrepreneurial capital, and the artisanal skills necessary to build mills and machinery. The textile mills erected there had a powerful influence on the evolution of American factory architecture. As we look closely at a number of New England mills, remember that similar patterns of structural development can be found in other regions of the United States and that the basic forms of the textile factory were readily adapted for other types of industry, including the manufacture of wood, metal, and paper products. Factories were not the first industrial buildings in America, nor did they represent more capital expenditure than some of the early and costly ironworks. Two processes of textile manufacturing and finishing, the carding of fibers and the fulling of woven cloth, had been powered by waterwheels (and occasionally by draft animals) before the first successful factory was built in Pawtucket in 1793. Proprietors of shops and country mills usually operated their enterprises directly with little of the managerial hierarchy and division of labor that would appear in the full-blown factory system. Shops lacked the factory’s sequential organization of powered machinery and its extensive mechanization through multiple stages of production.
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